A Live One is Phish's inaugural live album, for the first time on vinyl in a
limited edition colored vinyl 4-LP set.

A Live One was recorded primarily by Paul Languedoc on multitrack DA-88 DTRS
digital tapes throughout Phish’s 1994 summer, fall and holiday concert tours.
The band produced the album, selecting the material and overseeing the mix to
1/2" reels in March-April 1995 with Ed Thacker and his team of engineers at
Bearsville Studios.

A Live One contains twelve original Phish compositions, five of which were
previously unreleased: "Gumbo," "Slave To The Traffic Light," "Wilson,"
"Simple," and "Harry Hood." The record was sequenced to approximate a two-set
Phish performance and every track from the more-than-two-hour collection is
notable - from the thirty-plus minute “Tweezer” to the “Wilson” opener from the
band’s first Madison Square Garden show. “Gumbo” featured an updated version of
Phish’s own Giant Country Horns. More than twenty years later, A Live One
“Stash” and “Harry Hood” still rank among both songs’ top performances. After
five studio albums, A Live One captured and conveyed the magic of the band’s
improvisational live shows, and every song on the record (except “Montana”) has
remained a staple of Phish shows ever since.

A Live One was released by Elektra June 27, 1995 on CD and cassette. It was the
first Phish album to be certified gold and remains Phish’s best selling album.

The lacquers for the vinyl edition were cut from the 1/2" flat masters by
Chris Bellman at Bernie Grundman Mastering. Each LP is pressed onto 180g split
red/blue vinyl and includes a limited edition MP3 download of the album
transferred from vinyl.